Montreal 2 Ottawa 4 (Bell Centre)
Carey Price allowed three goals. Ottawa Senators won the game.
For Price-haters, you can fore-go the rest of the article. You have read the words that will keep you blissfully immersed in your delusion. However, the rest of us will look at the real reasons that the Canadiens were on the losing side tonight.
The post-game rhetoric from those in the anti-Price camp was pathetic, mindless and misplaced, yet unfortunately, predictable.
From his perspective, coach Jacques Martin said, “Our goaltending was excellent. Special teams was the difference — not our goaltender.”
I will agree with Martin’s second sentence wholeheartedly, as the Canadiens power-play was awful tonight, and was the primary reason that the Habs lost the game. But I’m not sure I would use the word “excellent” to describe the goaltending.
Price made some big saves and cannot be faulted on the three Ottawa goals. It can be said that, uncharacteristically, Price’s rebound control, was not sharp. The irony of that is probably lost on his critics.
For the first Ottawa goal, we can point the finger at Benoit Pouliot for his brutal giveaway.
It was a Pouliot mistake again ahead of Ottawa’s second goal. He was soft on Mike Fisher as the Senator crossed into the Montreal zone . Pouliot curled instead of taking the puck carrier. Fisher made an easy pass to Matt Carkner. Carkner’s point shot was stopped by Price but Daniel Alfredsson was all alone to bury the rebound. Gorges was caught out of position and got tangled with Nick Foligno on the left edge of the crease. Markov was unable to come across quickly enough to cover Gorge’s spot.
The third Ottawa goal started on a Matt D’Agostini giveaway to Alex Kovalev. Kovalev’s feed was shot by Chris Phillips from the point. The shot went off the stick of Tomas Plekanec and high into the net.
“I’ll take it,” Phillips said. “You know, you’ve got to be lucky to be good.”
Giveaways were a problem throughout the game but most evident in the second and third period. Poorly executed passes and disorganized play gave the Canadiens the dubious honour of holding a 30-to-12 advantage in giveaways. The Habs also had a 24-to-14 advantage when it came to firing pucks into opposition shin guards. When reversed the statistic is known as blocked shots, but it seemed that the Canadiens weren’t working very hard to get into good shooting lanes.
Other than those two categories, the statistical comparison was relatively equal. For their part, the Senators had their own mistakes. Mike Brodeur played well but wasn’t challenged with high quality scoring chances and gave up a soft goal to Tomas Plekanec. The Senators took far too many penalties but the Canadiens couldn’t capitalize.
Despite a reasonably well-played first period, the Canadiens resumed bad habits from the start of the second period and continued the sloppy play displayed in the Dallas game. Assistant coach Kirk Muller said that the Canadiens allowed Ottawa to dictate the flow and pace of the game. Muller also said that the Habs were too nonchalant against aggressive Ottawa penalty-killers.
The Canadiens’ power-play was 0-for-6 and gave up a short-handed goal. It was completely ineffective against the Ottawa defenders who pressured the puck carrier. As coach Martin said, the Habs’ power-play was the difference in the outcome of the game.
On a positive note Matt D’Agostini had one of his better games in quite some time. D’Agostini was much better in the offensive zone, and was second only to Mike Cammalleri in shots on goal with five. For his part Cammalleri continues to struggle mightily with Andrei Kostitsyn not in the lineup to create space for him. Despite his poor play in the defensive zone, Benoit Pouliot had a goal on a nice setup from Scott Gomez.
For this game, fans should blame the loss on: the Canadiens inability to move the puck; their defensive zone coverage; the power-play; or the coaching strategy. Anything else would be misplaced criticism.
The Habs left immediately after the game for New York where they will play on Sunday night.
Rocket’s three stars
1. Daniel Alfredsson
2. Tomas Plekanec
3. Mike Fisher
Material from wire services was used in this report.
(photo credit: Getty)
The broken record continues to play its sick tune.
The bottom line is that, again, when the goaltending is not great, and the powerplay is ineffective, the Canadiens lose. This has been an ongoing problem, and the coaches have been utterly unable to find ways to change things. Injuries are no longer an excuse. Sure, Andrei Kostitsyn is a huge part of the offense, but the team was notorious for its sloppiness even when he was in the lineup.
It also bears mentioning that Markov was terrible last night, posting a -3. Surely he's not to blame for the loss, but lately he's been trying to do too much offensively and it's costing him in the defensive zone. Hopefully a game like that is an abberation.
Tonight's game is huge. The Rangers have almost completely forgotten that the objective in hockey is to outscore your opponent. Tonight's starting goaltender is irrelevant to me. This is all about the team. A loss tonight to the struggling Rangers should be a damning indictment of the current structure of the team. A 2nd loss on a weekend vs teams that are battling the Habs for 8th place ought to be grounds for some kind of shakeup, whether in the dressing room, or behind the scenes.
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